Volcanica (Aug 2024)

Multiple sources of elevation change during and after the 2011–2012 Cordón Caulle, Chile eruption measured by satellite topographic time series

  • Diego Lobos Lillo,
  • Francisco Delgado,
  • Matthew Pritchard,
  • Philipp Ruprecht,
  • Carolina Muñoz-Saez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.30909/vol.07.02.541564
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 541 – 564

Abstract

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The 2011–2012 eruption at Cordón Caulle, Chile offers an exceptional opportunity to investigate topographic evolution of a laccolith, lava flows, and tephra during and after rhyolitic eruptions using satellite TanDEM-X and Plèiades data. We find distinct phases: rapid surface uplift from the laccolith and tephra (June–August 2011) and lava (June 2011–March 2012), followed by a reduction in the elevation of the laccolith and tephra (up to 19 m yr−1) until February 2013, and slower subsidence of all deposits until 2019 (the most recent data). The spatial distribution of subsidence-to-uplift ratios shows different volcanic and geomorphological processes occurring (degassing, cooling, crystallization, lateral movement, compaction, erosion). Pre-eruptive river channels showed elevation increases of up to 10–50 m due to tephra deposition, but this tephra was largely removed within three to four years. This research shows the potential of repeating high-resolution remote sensing elevation data to elucidate volcanic landscape evolution and yields insights into the co- and post-eruptive evolution of deposits.

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